Trump insults and threatens GOP senators in long rant after health bill failure

Senate Republicans failed to pass their 'skinny bill' that would repeal parts of the Affordable Care Act on July 28. Three republicans, including Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), voted against the bill. (Amber Ferguson/The Washington Post)

After a years-long effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act collapsed on Capitol Hill, President Trump castigated Republican senators on social media Saturday.

“They look like fools,” the president wrote on Twitter — and unless they tried yet again to repeal and replace Obamacare, they would be “total quitters” too.

Republican Senate must get rid of 60 vote NOW! It is killing the R Party, allows 8 Dems to control country. 200 Bills sit in Senate. A JOKE!

Trump's multi-chaptered and occasionally self-contradictory rant kicked off Friday morning, shortly after three Republican senators joined every Democrat to sink the GOP's last-ditch effort to overturn Obamacare, 51 to 49.

At first, Trump seemed resigned to let the Affordable Care Act, also referred to as Obamacare, take its course, convinced that the program will fail and force Congress to replace it.

3 Republicans and 48 Democrats let the American people down. As I said from the beginning, let ObamaCare implode, then deal. Watch!

But shortly after the sun rose on Friday, Trump began pushing for new bills, which he argued could not pass unless the Senate abolished the legislative filibuster, which had nothing to do with last week's failure on the Obamacare repeal.

If Republicans are going to pass great future legislation in the Senate, they must immediately go to a 51 vote majority, not senseless 60...

The filibuster lets a minority party block legislation that would ordinarily pass with a simple majority of votes.

Trump acknowledged in his tweets that “parts of health care could pass at 51" votes — as Friday's repeal bill could have.

But “so many great future bills & budgets need 60 votes,” Trump wrote, before digressing from health care to post a #FlashBackFriday tweet, and then to announce that he'd replaced his White House chief of staff.

It's worth noting that while Trump now attacks the filibuster as antiquated, four years earlier he defended it as a venerable tradition dating back to Thomas Jefferson. Once used rarely and memorably (as when a senator spoke and sang for 15 hours to block a vote in 1992), the filibuster has become an almost routine tactic for minority parties to impede bills and Cabinet and judicial nominees they can't defeat in a straight-up vote.

On Saturday, Trump blamed the filibuster for hypothetically allowing Democrats to block “complete Healthcare,” though so far Republican senators have not been able to unite around even a narrowly tailored bill, such as Friday's attempt to pass a so-called skinny repeal.

Trump also wrote that “Kate's Law,” a bill that would increase punishments for criminals who illegally reenter the United States after being deported, would never pass with the filibuster in place.

....8 Dems totally control the U.S. Senate. Many great Republican bills will never pass, like Kate's Law and complete Healthcare. Get smart!

To attempt a summary of his arguments so far: Trump knows that some health-care bills could pass through the Senate with a simple majority of votes. Friday's repeal bill could have, for example. But Republicans need to kill the filibuster anyway, Trump argues, lest it allow Democrats to block a more sweeping health-care reform bill, which does not yet exist but will be supported by a majority of senators (but not 60 of them) once it is written.

If that logic strikes you as confusing, you're not alone:

If McCain had just voted yes they would have had those 60 votes required under reconciliation! No, wait.... https://t.co/UkHyqx89aX

Things are so bad, Trump wrote, that “if a new HealthCare Bill is not approved quickly, BAILOUTS for Insurance Companies and BAILOUTS for Members of Congress will end very soon!”

He then digressed again to talk about the stock market — up since his election, he wrote. But Trump returned to his health-care monologue in the late afternoon, with another dig at Republicans who have spent years trying and failing to reform the nation's health-care system.

Try again, the president told the senators, or you're “total quitters.”

Unless the Republican Senators are total quitters, Repeal & Replace is not dead! Demand another vote before voting on any other bill!